This collection includes most of the ASU Theses and Dissertations from 2011 to present. ASU Theses and Dissertations are available in downloadable PDF format; however, a small percentage of items are under embargo. Information about the dissertations/theses includes degree information, committee members, an abstract, supporting data or media.

In addition to the electronic theses found in the ASU Digital Repository, ASU Theses and Dissertations can be found in the ASU Library Catalog.

Dissertations and Theses granted by Arizona State University are archived and made available through a joint effort of the ASU Graduate College and the ASU Libraries. For more information or questions about this collection contact or visit the Digital Repository ETD Library Guide or contact the ASU Graduate College at gradformat@asu.edu.

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Description
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are widely used in many applications because of their small size, great mobility and hover performance. This has been a consequence of the fast development of electronics, cheap lightweight flight controllers for accurate positioning and cameras. This thesis describes modeling, control and design of an oblique-cross-quadcopter

Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are widely used in many applications because of their small size, great mobility and hover performance. This has been a consequence of the fast development of electronics, cheap lightweight flight controllers for accurate positioning and cameras. This thesis describes modeling, control and design of an oblique-cross-quadcopter platform for indoor-environments.

One contribution of the work was the design of a new printed-circuit-board (PCB) flight controller (called MARK3). Key features/capabilities are as follows:

(1) a Teensy 3.2 microcontroller with 168MHz overclock –used for communications, full-state estimation and inner-outer loop hierarchical rate-angle-speed-position control,

(2) an on-board MEMS inertial-measurement-unit (IMU) which includes an LSM303D (3DOF-accelerometer and magnetometer), an L3GD20 (3DOF-gyroscope) and a BMP180 (barometer) for attitude estimation (barometer/magnetometer not used),

(3) 6 pulse-width-modulator (PWM) output pins supports up to 6 rotors

(4) 8 PWM input pins support up to 8-channel 2.4 GHz transmitter/receiver for manual control,

(5) 2 5V servo extension outputs for other requirements (e.g. gimbals),

(6) 2 universal-asynchronous-receiver-transmitter (UART) serial ports - used by flight controller to process data from Xbee; can be used for accepting outer-loop position commands from NVIDIA TX2 (future work),

(7) 1 I2C-serial-protocol two-wire port for additional modules (used to read data from IMU at 400 Hz),

(8) a 20-pin port for Xbee telemetry module connection; permits Xbee transceiver on desktop PC to send position/attitude commands to Xbee transceiver on quadcopter.

The quadcopter platform consists of the new MARK3 PCB Flight Controller, an ATG-250 carbon-fiber frame (250 mm), a DJI Snail propulsion-system (brushless-three-phase-motor, electronic-speed-controller (ESC) and propeller), an HTC VIVE Tracker and RadioLink R9DS 9-Channel 2.4GHz Receiver. This platform is completely compatible with the HTC VIVE Tracking System (HVTS) which has 7ms latency, submillimeter accuracy and a much lower price compared to other millimeter-level tracking systems.

The thesis describes nonlinear and linear modeling of the quadcopter’s 6DOF rigid-body dynamics and brushless-motor-actuator dynamics. These are used for hierarchical-classical-control-law development near hover. The HVTS was used to demonstrate precision hover-control and path-following. Simulation and measured flight-data are shown to be similar. This work provides a foundation for future precision multi-quadcopter formation-flight-control.
ContributorsLu, Shi (Author) / Rodriguez, Armando A. (Thesis advisor) / Tsakalis, Konstantinos (Committee member) / Si, Jennie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Over the past few decades, there is an increase in demand for various ground robot applications such as warehouse management, surveillance, mapping, infrastructure inspection, etc. This steady increase in demand has led to a significant rise in the nonholonomic differential drive vehicles (DDV) research. Albeit extensive work has been done

Over the past few decades, there is an increase in demand for various ground robot applications such as warehouse management, surveillance, mapping, infrastructure inspection, etc. This steady increase in demand has led to a significant rise in the nonholonomic differential drive vehicles (DDV) research. Albeit extensive work has been done in developing various control laws for trajectory tracking, point stabilization, formation control, etc., there are still problems and critical questions in regards to design, modeling, and control of DDV’s - that need to be adequately addressed. In this thesis, three different dynamical models are considered that are formed by varying the input/output parameters of the DDV model. These models are analyzed to understand their stability, bandwidth, input-output coupling, and control design properties. Furthermore, a systematic approach has been presented to show the impact of design parameters such as mass, inertia, radius of the wheels, and center of gravity location on the dynamic and inner-loop (speed) control design properties. Subsequently, extensive simulation and hardware trade studies have been conductedto quantify the impact of design parameters and modeling variations on the performance of outer-loop cruise and position control (along a curve). In addition to this, detailed guidelines are provided for when a multi-input multi-output (MIMO) control strategy is advisable over a single-input single-output (SISO) control strategy; when a less stable plant is preferable over a more stable one in order to accommodate performance specifications. Additionally, a multi-robot trajectory tracking implementation based on receding horizon optimization approach is also presented. In most of the optimization-based trajectory tracking approaches found in the literature, only the constraints imposed by the kinematic model are incorporated into the problem. This thesis elaborates the fundamental problem associated with these methods and presents a systematic approach to understand and quantify when kinematic model based constraints are sufficient and when dynamic model-based constraints are necessary to obtain good tracking properties. Detailed instructions are given for designing and building the DDV based on performance specifications, and also, an open-source platform capable of handling high-speed multi-robot research is developed in C++.
ContributorsManne, Sai Sravan (Author) / Rodriguez, Armando A (Thesis advisor) / Si, Jennie (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021